[CW: Internalized Racism and Internalized Transphobia]

Do you think the fact that I'm black and trans makes me scarier, more threatening, more evil, and potentially more violent?

She is a white cis woman, and I have such strong internalized hatred that I legitimately am scared that she's going to inevitably feel like I'm a villain who will hurt her because I'm black and trans.

I can't get the racial essentialist ideas about black people inherently being more "violent," "aggressive," and "predisposed to crime" out of my head. I can't erase the outrageous discourse fearmongering about "trans women forcing cis lesbians to have sex with them" from my mind.

Last night, I was despairing because of this, so I asked her the question you see in the above quote. She responded with:

No angel 😞 that makes me sad that these thoughts cross your mind

I can’t empathize [with your internalized racism and internalized transphobia specifically] because I’ve never experienced it, but I can sympathize because I am a woman. I don’t see you any different than any other human because of your [race and gender identity], it’s irrelevant to me. I see you as superior [to many other humans] because of your compassion 💚💚💚

She has gone through internalized misogyny and internalized homophobia herself, so she gets what it's like to have self-hatred on the basis of a marginalized identity.

Oftentimes, I've always felt like I'm an inferior being because of the intersection of multiple marginalized identities that I have going on. I still feel that way, and for some reason, I still continue to perpetuate it by casually referring to myself with disparaging terms like "freak," "subhuman," "abomination," and "disgusting."

However, I've been using a new term as of late, and that's "monster." I'm now feeling like I'm a violent, evil threat because I'm black and transfeminine. I don't have urges to hurt anyone, be it through my words or through my hands, but I know myself as nothing more than a demon at this point.

That being said, it does make me happy knowing that she wholeheartedly accepts me as who I am. I'm not used to this, and when someone does tell me that they do accept me for who I am, I often regard it as performative. Knowing who she is as a person, it feels nothing but genuine coming from her.

My internalized bigotry may not be even close to gone, but there is hope. I often struggle to refrain from practices that ignite it. I still find it hard to abstain from using such degrading terms when referring to "what" I am.

"Human" feels very wrong to say, but I hope, one day, especially given the love of my partner, I can call myself that word and not feel like I'm uncomfortably lying to myself.

  • PKMKII [none/use name]
    ·
    4 months ago

    I can't erase the outrageous discourse fearmongering about "trans women forcing cis lesbians to have sex with them" from my mind.

    I’ll point out that that framing from transphobes presents cis lesbians as without agency, passively entering into relationships without choice. It’s a bit of misogyny snuck in under the pretense of “defending” women. So when those thoughts creep in, remember what it implies about your partner and how that doesn’t line up with the reality of who she is.

    • Angel [any]
      hexagon
      ·
      4 months ago

      It is an absurdly common trope for most anti-trans rhetoric to really just be a two birds, one stone approach for being both transphobic and misogynistic simultaneously.

      This isn't shocking because gender essentialism inherently leads to misogyny. Unfortunately, not even all "feminists" realize this.